On their first day sixth grade, the students of Jose Urbina Lopez Elementary School in the Mexican border city of Matamoros find their new teacher rolling on the floor surrounded by overturned desks.
Theyโre not desks, he exclaims. Theyโre lifeboats.
So begins Christopher Zallaโs โRadical,โ an inspirational based-on-a-true-story drama about an unconventional teacher named Sergio Juarez Correa (Eugenio Derbez). His day-one lesson is ultimately about buoyancy. But the metaphor isnโt hard to grasp. In Lopezโs classroom, education is a life raft.
โRadical,โ which opens in theaters Friday, is a conventional but stirring entry in the crowded canon of uplifting educator tales like โStand and Deliver,โ โLean on Meโ and โThe Class.โ
โRadical,โ though, isnโt set at an inner-city school in Los Angeles, New Jersey or Paris, like those films are. Matamoros, along the Rio Grande and across from Brownsville, Texas, is considered a lawless place, known for extreme violence and migrant encampments. โRadicalโ is also set in 2011, among the bloodiest years of Mexicoโs drug war.
That makes for an especially unlikely backdrop for classroom revival. The school, itself, is known as โThe School of Punishment.โ For safety, its gates are locked during the school hours.
Sergioโs self-empowering method is to allow kids to follow their curiosity and find answers for themselves. Theyโre skeptical at first but soon are engaged and excited by their freedom to lead their own learning. More than once, Sergio says the students donโt even really need him.
This image released by Participant/Pantelion Films shows Eugenio Derbez in a scene from “Radical.” Credit: AP
There are plenty of familiar beats as the school year moves along. Sergioโs ways draw the ire of other teachers. Parents are distrustful, wondering if heโs giving kids facing a harsh future false hope. But while โRadical,โ an audience winner at the Sundance Film Festival, is formulaic…
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